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How Obama Is Going To Raise Your Taxes

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Published: November 7, 2012
By
Staff

How Obama Is Going To Raise Your Taxes, One likely change will be to increase a levy that many Americans pay by 5 to 10 percentage points. Gross: Fixing ‘Cliff’ Will Mean ‘High, Higher’ Taxes, A newly re-elected President Barack Obama will push for higher taxes — including a dividend-tax hike that will cause a substantial drop in stocks, Pimco’s Bill Gross told CNBC Wednesday.

Obama will get little time to enjoy his election victory Tuesday, as he will have to get to work quickly with Congress to avoid the nation’s “fiscal cliff” of looming mandated tax increases and spending cuts.

One likely remedy for revenue-raising will be to take the current dividend tax rate of 15 percent and hike it five to 10 percentage points, said Gross, co-CEO at the firm that runs the largest bond fund in the world and has $1.8 trillion assets under management.

“Obama ran on a higher-tax agenda,” Gross said during a “Squawk Box” interview. “Marginal income taxes go from 35 to 40 (percent), capital gains from 15 to 20, dividends from 15 to who knows what…so they could go high, high and higher.”

Risk-averse investors prefer dividend stocks, which are common in pensions and mutual funds even though they’ve largely underperformed other market indexes over the past four years.

Consequently, Gross said, higher dividend taxes would make those companies less attractive and thus take the stock market down 5 to 10 percent.

That’s “the ultimate danger here for the stock market,” he said. “Dividends are sheltered in 401(k)s, they’re sheltered in pension funds. At the margins investors pay dividend tax rates. To the extent that you raise them from 15 to, say, 25 (percent), that implies in terms of equaling after tax rates another 5 to 10 percent down in terms of stock prices. We’ve been very spoiled for the last 10 years.”

Gross is not alone in his concerns over tax structure.

Ron Florance, managing director of investment strategy at Wells Fargo Private Bank, said he is positioning clients for the rougher tax road ahead.

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